Garrick Ryan C
Department of Biology, University of Mississippi , Oxford , MS , United States of America.
PeerJ. 2017 Mar 23;5:e3127. doi: 10.7717/peerj.3127. eCollection 2017.
The wood-feeding cockroach Scudder (Blattodea: Cryptocercidae) is an important member of the dead wood (saproxylic) community in montane forests of the southeastern United States. However, its population biology remains poorly understood. Here, aspects of family group co-occurrence were characterized to provide basic information that can be extended by studies on the evolution and maintenance of sub-sociality. Broad sampling across the species' range was coupled with molecular data (mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences). The primary questions were: (1) what proportion of rotting logs contain two or more different mtDNA haplotypes and how often can this be attributed to multiple families inhabiting the same log, (2) are multi-family logs spatially clustered, and (3) what levels of genetic differentiation among haplotypes exist within a log, and how genetically similar are matrilines of co-occurring family groups? Multi-family logs were identified on the premise that three different mtDNA haplotypes, or two different haplotypes among adult females, is inconsistent with a single family group founded by one male-female pair. Results showed that of the 88 rotting logs from which multiple adult were sampled, 41 logs (47%) contained two or more mtDNA haplotypes, and at least 19 of these logs (22% overall) were inferred to be inhabited by multiple families. There was no strong evidence for spatial clustering of the latter class of logs. The frequency distribution of nucleotide differences between co-occurring haplotypes was strongly right-skewed, such that most haplotypes were only one or two mutations apart, but more substantial divergences (up to 18 mutations, or 1.6% uncorrected sequence divergence) do occasionally occur within logs. This work represents the first explicit investigation of family group co-occurrence in , providing a valuable baseline for follow-up studies.
以木材为食的蟑螂斯库德(蜚蠊目:隐尾蠊科)是美国东南部山地森林中枯木(腐木)群落的重要成员。然而,其种群生物学仍知之甚少。在此,对家庭群体共存的各个方面进行了特征描述,以提供可通过亚社会性进化与维持研究加以扩展的基础信息。在该物种分布范围内进行广泛采样,并结合分子数据(线粒体DNA(mtDNA)序列)。主要问题如下:(1)有多大比例的腐烂原木包含两种或更多不同的mtDNA单倍型,以及这种情况可归因于同一原木中有多个家庭居住的频率是多少;(2)多家庭原木在空间上是否聚集;(3)在一根原木内,单倍型之间的遗传分化水平如何,以及共存家庭群体的母系在基因上有多相似。多家庭原木是在这样的前提下确定的,即三种不同的mtDNA单倍型,或成年雌性中的两种不同单倍型,与由一对雌雄建立的单个家庭群体不一致。结果表明,在从其中采样了多个成虫的88根腐烂原木中,41根原木(47%)包含两种或更多的mtDNA单倍型,其中至少19根原木(总体占22%)被推断有多个家庭居住。没有强有力的证据表明后一类原木在空间上聚集。共存单倍型之间核苷酸差异的频率分布严重右偏,以至于大多数单倍型之间仅相差一两个突变,但在原木内偶尔也会出现更大的差异(多达18个突变,或1.6%的未校正序列差异)。这项工作代表了对隐尾蠊科家庭群体共存的首次明确研究,为后续研究提供了有价值的基线。